Steve Holmes wrote: > I just got signed up to Sprint Broadband internet service here under the > impression I could get high download speeds near 100KBPS. Unfortunately, > I am only getting transfers in the mid twenty's on a good day. A test at > their demo FTP site yielded much higher results but I noticed their test > file was a nulls. I'll bet the fact the file is all the same character > might result in "on the fly" data compression. > > I haven't yet tried this on a winblows machine yet but all my friends > using the service with their winblows are getting speeds much better than > me. I'm wondering if linux needs to be tweaked around a bit to speed up > file transfers? I tried adding a window value on the route command for my > network setup but that seems to have no visible results. I've noticed that the download speeds for SBB are *really* variable. On average, I seem to get 20-40KBs... but at peak times, it's as low as 10. Every now and then, I get great downloads... the highest I've seen is 160KBs. Just a few minutes ago, I was dl'ing at 140KBs. Somebody else mentioned that SBB was reworking Gilbert.. and I can second that. In the past few weeks(months), things have gotten much faster. However, in the past few months, I get a lot more drop-outs, too. My connection drops for anywhere from a few minutes to over 6 hours. It happens at least weekly and sometimes daily. It can be more than a little irritating when I'm working. Upload speeds is bursty and horrible. If the file is less than a couple hundred kilo, then it's pretty fast. But if gets over 500K, then the upload likes to freeze for long periods of time. FWIW, I get the exact same tx speeds on Windows and Linux. -- Kurt Granroth | http://www.granroth.org KDE Developer/Evangelist | SuSE Labs Open Source Developer granroth@kde.org | granroth@suse.com KDE -- Conquer Your Desktop